2012
DOI: 10.1007/s12078-012-9131-y
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Effects of an Artificial Smoke on Arousals During Human Sleep

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Cited by 9 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The sensation of nasal airflow is provided by stimulation of nasal trigeminal nerve endings that detect cooling of the nasal mucosa, as occurs during inspiration 1 27 A purely trigeminal stimulus has been shown to increase arousal frequency and duration during sleep, 28 whereas no effect was seen with an olfactory stimulus 29 . Therefore, it seems that a nasal airflow stimulus can influence brain activity.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The sensation of nasal airflow is provided by stimulation of nasal trigeminal nerve endings that detect cooling of the nasal mucosa, as occurs during inspiration 1 27 A purely trigeminal stimulus has been shown to increase arousal frequency and duration during sleep, 28 whereas no effect was seen with an olfactory stimulus 29 . Therefore, it seems that a nasal airflow stimulus can influence brain activity.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1,27 A purely trigeminal stimulus has been shown to increase arousal frequency and duration during sleep, 28 whereas no effect was seen with an olfactory stimulus. 29 Therefore, it seems that a nasal airflow stimulus can influence brain activity. Further evidence is discussed below.…”
Section: Does Asymmetrical Nasal Airflow Cause Asymmetrical Brain Actmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The children were in a relaxed condition, were in a post-prandial state (i.e., they had eaten about an hour before the EEG recording) [25] and were in a waking state [26]. The choice of the eucalyptol odorant, which has a mixed component both olfactory and trigeminal, allowed us to keep the children in arousal during the CSERPs recordings [27][28][29][30].…”
Section: Oerp Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Trigeminale Reize erhöhten dagegen parallel zu steigenden Reizkonzentrationen die Arousal-Häufigkeit sowohl im Leicht-, Tief-als auch im REM-Schlaf [3]. In einer anderen Studie stieg bei einer CO 2 -Reizung ebenfalls die Arousal-Frequenz in Abhängigkeit von der CO 2 -Konzentration; und dies übereinstimmend in allen Schlafstadien [33]. In der gleichen Arbeit war künstlicher Rauch als lebensgefährdender Geruch dagegen nicht in der Lage, die Arousal-Häufigkeit in allen Schlafstadien zu erhöhen.…”
Section: Chemosensorische Stimulationunclassified